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   Message 2,805 of 3,036   
   Daryl Stout to All   
   ARRL Propagation Bulletin   
   10 Feb 23 10:49:40   
   
   TZUTC: -0600   
   MSGID: 340.fidonet-ls_arrl@1:2320/33 284bacf8   
   PID: Synchronet 3.19c-Win32 master/d1dfc9c1b Dec  7 2022 MSC 1929   
   TID: SBBSecho 3.15-Win32 master/d1dfc9c1b Dec  7 2022 MSC 1929   
   BBSID: TBOLT   
   CHRS: ASCII 1   
      
   SB PROP @ ARL $ARLP006   
   ARLP006 Propagation de K7RA   
      
   ZCZC AP06   
   QST de W1AW    
   Propagation Forecast Bulletin 6  ARLP006   
   From Tad Cook, K7RA   
   Seattle, WA  February 10, 2023   
   To all radio amateurs   
      
   SB PROP ARL ARLP006   
   ARLP006 Propagation de K7RA   
      
   A period of rising solar activity returned this week.   
      
   Ten new sunspot groups appeared this reporting week (February 2-8),   
   two on February 3, one each on February 4-5, four more on February   
   6, and two more on February 8.   
      
   On February 9, three more sunspot groups emerged.   
      
   Early on February 9 Spaceweather.com reported a large emerging   
   sunspot over our Sun's southeast horizon.   
      
   Average daily sunspot number this week rose from 80.7 to 95.1, and   
   average daily solar flux from 139.5 to 155.9.   
      
   On Thursday, February 9 both the sunspot number and solar flux were   
   above the average for the previous seven days. Sunspot number at 150   
   compared to the average 95.1 and solar flux at 214.9 compared to the   
   average of 155.9. Both indicate an upward trend.   
      
   Geomagnetic indicators rose, planetary A index from 7.9 to 11.7,   
   middle latitude numbers from 5.9 to 7.6.   
      
   The rise in geomagnetic activity was related to solar wind late in   
   the reporting week.   
      
   The solar flux prediction on Wednesday was 192 for February 9 (the   
   actual noon solar flux was 214.9), then 195 on February 10-13. As   
   you can see below, the Thursday prediction is more optimistic for   
   the next few days.   
      
   Predicted solar flux is 214 on February 10, 212 on February 11-13,   
   then 208, 205 and 202 on February 14-16, 150 on February 17-18, then   
   145, 140, 135, 130 and 135 on February 19-23, 130 on February 24-26,   
   125 on February 27, 130 on February 28 through March 3, then 135,   
   150 and 160 on March 4-6, 155 on March 7-8, 160 on March 9, and 155   
   on March 10-12, then 150 on March 13-17.   
      
   Predicted planetary A index is 12 and 8  on February 10-11, then 5   
   on February 12-17, 8 on February 18-19, 5 on February 20-21, 10 on   
   February 22-24, then 5, 5 and 8 on February 25-27, and 5, 5, and 8   
   on February 28 through March 2, then 5, 5, and 10 on March 3-5, then   
   15, 15, 12 and 8 on March 6-9, then 5 on March 10-16, 8 on March   
   17-18, 5 on March 19-20 and 10 on March 21-23.   
      
   F.K. Janda, OK1HH wrote:   
      
   "Weekly Commentary on the Sun, the Magnetosphere, and the Earth's   
   Ionosphere - February 9, 2023.   
      
   "Solar activity was lower between 26 January and 6 February, as   
   expected. Two weeks ago, large sunspot groups AR3190 and AR3192,   
   fell behind the Sun's western limb. They have now appeared near the   
   eastern limb as AR3217 and AR3218. In particular, the region of   
   AR3217 was already letting us know of its activity with plasma   
   bursts before we could observe it.   
      
   "Thereafter we observed moderate flares in it. AR3217 and AR3218   
   will now move through the solar disk, and the increase in solar   
   activity will continue.   
      
   "On February 7, rapidly developing sunspot group AR3213 suddenly   
   appeared, where at most only two small spots could be observed   
   shortly before. Medium-sized flares were observed in AR3213 in the   
   following days.   
      
   "Another new activity was the increase in the Earth's magnetic field   
   activity starting on February 6.   
      
   "The subsequent increase in the MUF (highest usable frequencies of   
   the ionospheric F2 layer) has been slow and irregular so far. We   
   will have to wait a few more days for its higher values."   
      
   Check out Scott Craig, WA4TTK and his Solar Data Plotting Utility.   
   He wrote it several decades ago back in the days of MS-DOS, and the   
   Windows version still works today. It displays sunspot numbers and   
   solar flux all the way back to January 1, 1989:   
      
   http://www.craigcentral.com/sol.asp   
      
   Click the "Download SOL313W.ZIP" file to install the program, then   
   download the updated GRAPH.dat file for the latest data. It is   
   updated to last week, so you can try out the data insertion on this   
   bulletin.   
      
   He posted a new copy of the data file, provided by N1API.   
      
   The utility will update the data every week by pointing it toward a   
   copy of our bulletin in .txt format.   
      
   The GRAPH.dat file is in text format and can be imported into a   
   spreadsheet program to display the data any way you want.   
      
   Tech Times and Weather.com articles on a Radio Blackout:   
      
   https://bit.ly/40J3g6m   
      
   https://bit.ly/3lojTnY   
      
   KB1DK sent this article about something occurring on our Sun:   
      
   https://bit.ly/3Xju0r9   
      
   Larry, W0OGH in Cochise County, Arizona wrote:   
      
   "Who says you can't have fun running QRP?   
      
   "I started playing with QRP on CW, my KX3 at 10W and 10M 4 element   
   Yagi just after February 1.   
      
   "Why so late in the game? I don't know but maybe it was because the   
   signals took such an upturn in strength.   
      
   "Have been working some POTA stations QRP but no DX until February 1   
   when I worked E77DX, OK9PEP, PA1CC, DS2HWS, UA1CE, YL3FT, UY2VM,   
   HB0/HB9LCW, OT4A, ON4KHG, S01WS, ZX89L, CX5FK, 9A/UW1GZ, LZ1ND,   
   PA3EVY, YU1JW, F6IQA, EA6ACA, ON5ZZ, GM4ATA, OP4F, EI0CZ and many   
   more, all on 10 meters.   
      
   "But the kicker and best of all was working EP2ABS on the morning of   
   2/6/23 at 1654 UTC on 28.0258 MHz.   
      
   "First time ever in 65 years that I have ever worked an Iran station   
   much less heard one. He was really strong and calling CQ getting no   
   answers. At the same time I called him, another station called as   
   well but he came back to me.   
      
   "Thereafter he had a pileup, but his signal started dropping off, so   
   I caught him at the right time. Maybe a duct? Yep, the DX is out   
   there on 10M and when the band is hot, you gotta be there.   
      
   "I have even worked some AM stations on and above 29.000 MHz with   
   QRP. Lots more fun than high power which in my case is 100W from my   
   K3."   
      
   A friend here in Seattle worked him on the same day, was very   
   surprised, and mentioned a friend in California who worked EP2ABS   
   with 100 watts and an 18 foot wire.   
      
   Another "news" source reporting rising solar activity as some sort   
   of existential threat:   
      
   https://bit.ly/3YiRcXP   
      
   https://bit.ly/3RQ8CZz   
      
   A more reliable source:   
      
   https://bit.ly/3YAAIu4   
      
   Dr. Tamitha Skov's, WX6SWW, latest report from February 5:   
      
   https://youtu.be/1Bcmzj7h_mY   
      
   Send your tips, reports, observations, questions and comments to   
   k7ra@arrl.net . When reporting observations, don't forget to tell us   
   which mode you were operating.   
      
   For more information concerning shortwave radio propagation, see   
   http://www.arrl.org/propagation and the ARRL Technical Information   
   Service at http://arrl.org/propagation-of-rf-signals . For an   
   explanation of numbers used in this bulletin, see   
   http://arrl.org/the-sun-the-earth-the-ionosphere .   
      
   An archive of past propagation bulletins is at   
   http://arrl.org/w1aw-bulletins-archive-propagation . More good   
   information and tutorials on propagation are at http://k9la.us/ .   
      
   Instructions for starting or ending email distribution of ARRL   
   bulletins are at http://arrl.org/bulletins .   
      
   Sunspot numbers for February 2 through 8, 2023 were 56, 74, 66, 79,   
   139, 110, and 142, with a mean of 95.1. 10.7 cm flux was 134.9,   
   134.5, 139, 144, 156.7, 184.7, and 197.6, with a mean of 155.9.   
   Estimated planetary A indices were 6, 9, 6, 5, 18, 20, and 18, with   
   a mean of 11.7. Middle latitude A index was 2, 6, 5, 3, 13, 12, and   
   12, with a mean of 7.6.   
   NNNN   
   /EX   
   --- SBBSecho 3.15-Win32   
    * Origin: The Thunderbolt BBS - Little Rock, Arkansas (1:2320/33)   
   SEEN-BY: 1/123 15/0 90/1 105/81 106/201 116/17 18 120/340 123/10 131   
   SEEN-BY: 153/7715 154/10 30 40 50 700 218/700 840 220/70 90 221/6   
   SEEN-BY: 226/17 18 30 227/114 229/110 111 112 113 114 206 307 317   
   SEEN-BY: 229/424 426 428 470 664 700 266/512 267/800 282/1038 301/1   
   SEEN-BY: 317/3 320/219 322/757 342/200 396/45 460/58 633/267 280 281   
   SEEN-BY: 633/412 416 418 712/620 848 770/1 100 340 772/210 220 230   
   SEEN-BY: 2320/0 33 105 304 401 3634/12   
   PATH: 2320/33 105 154/10 221/6 218/840 770/1 712/848 633/280 229/426   
      

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